8.2.8. Changing and Extending the Build Environment
If packages are needed that are not included in development environment they
can simply be added.
This how-to explains it for Windows.
If there is a reference to conf\env\conda_env_win32.yaml and you are on Linux
replace it by conf/env/conda_env_linux.yaml.
The basic required packages are listed in
conf/env/conda_env_win32-pkgs.yaml.
If a package should be added or removed, it needs to be done here.
This file only defines the major Python version that should be used.
The steps are basically:
- Add new packages and/or remove no longer needed packages and update the environment name, for this example - example-env.
- Create a new pseudo-base environment that includes all needed Python packages for the project. 
- Export the exact environment definition. 
- Update the test suite. 
- Commit the new environment to the repository. 
- Add a changelog entry that tells the user to run the environment update script. 
These steps in details:
- Add packages/remove packages and update environment name. 
- Create a new pseudo-base environment and wait for the solver to succeeded. - C:\Users\vulpes>%USERPROFILE%\miniconda3\Scripts\activate base (base) C:\Users\vulpes>conda env create -f conf\env\conda_env_win32-pkgs.yaml 
- Export the new development environment: - (base) C:\Users\vulpes>conda env export -n example-env > conf\env\conda_env_win32.yaml 
- Remove the - Prefixentry from- conf\env\conda_env_win32.yaml.
- Adapt the test suite as needed and run it afterwards. 
- Commit the new environment file to the repository. 
- Add changelog entry. 
8.2.8.1. Further Reading
An explanation why build environments are used is found in Build Environment.
